Newspapers / Forest City Courier (Forest … / May 14, 1925, edition 1 / Page 9
Part of Forest City Courier (Forest City, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1925 ♦ Made to Match jtj ♦ Your || | t Complexion !ti T Some one of the several ♦ tint* of Cara Nome Face + Powder will blend with ► jj, your complexion perfect- ♦ ly. And the powder adheres + beautifully. o l :: These, however, are only o ♦ two of Cara Nome's many ♦ virtues. ♦ ► ♦ ► \ The odor of Cara Nome o J is entrancing the box in ♦ which it is packaged, a ♦ £ delight to the eye. X ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ z i Cara Nome ♦ ♦ | | Face Powder *> I $2.00 I . . | | Reinhardt Drug Co. ♦ | | ♦ TJx,o Stare » ♦ ♦ f FOREST CITY, N. C. % * I t * SEE OUR I | NEW RIDING I | CULTIVATOR | • > ♦ The latest and best for £ 6 any farmer. ? ! SCREEN DOORS | ! AND WINDOWS t * 2 s ALL KINDS OF SCREEN J j WORK. J ♦ .. ♦ 4 Also doing a general line £ £ of blacksmithing ana all + ♦ kinds of woodwork. 2 5 Your patronage appreci- r % ated. «. | H. L. KANIPE | | FOREST CITY, N. C. ♦ J 21-tf ♦ « ♦ fGILBERT'S STUDIoI b O Z FOREST CITY, N. C. t % The Home of Fins Photo graohs. % # . ■& Kodak Finishing the way £ it should be done. ♦ % Mail Orders Given Special % % Attention. % +? y $■ » !s■&■?;-J r n fi 11 prrni fMfti i^dl Velvet beans, soy beans, sugar drip cane seed, orange and amber cane seed, home-grown and recleaned; cow peas, yellow dent, lowa silver mine, Tennessee red cob and Has tings prolific seed corn; sudan grass, cat-tail millett, teosentie, etc. Will I have potato plants for delivery about April 26th. C. C. KIRBY'S Seed and Grocery Store 28-4t Gaffney, S. C. 1 COURTNEY & HIGHTOWER | Funeral Directors and Em- + ♦ balmers. ♦ ♦ X East Avondale, N. C. ▼ T Located in Wells Bros. Store. Z ♦ All Calls Responded to t I Promptly—Day or Night. J Hearse Service Rendered i f Promptly. I BOSTIC NEWS OF INTEREST Miscellaneous Shower For Miss Harris—B. Y. P. U. Gives Program—School Closing. Bostic, May 11.—A delightful party of last week was a miscellan eous shower given by the Parent- Teachers' Association at the home of Mrs. W. B. Hollifield, complimenting Miss Mattie Harris, a member of the school faculty, whose marriage to Mr. Dumont Green, of Washington, D. C., will take place the latter part of May. The guests were met at the door by Mrs. R. L. Likens and ushered into the living room which was beautifully decorated with rainbow colors. Little Sybil Moore and Harrill Hollifield drew into the room a wagon decorat ed in rainbow colors and filled with many pretty and useful gifts. These were received by the bride-elect at one end of a rainbow, which was draped across the room while at the other end had been placed a pot of gold. Misses Eunice Hollifield and Glenn Harris rendered several piano and vocal selections. At the close of the evening a delicious ice course was served. Those enjoying the party were: Mesdames S. L. Talbert, Joe Gunner, Ellie Thomas, John Whit aker, R. L. Likens, J. D. Clemmer, C. T. Wright, R. L. Harrill, G. C. Blair, L. L. Moore, F. L. Hollifield, B. B. Biggerstaff, W. "W. Harris, D. C. Martin, C. E. Laughridge, R. C. Dayton, W. B. Gurley, S. Swink, Stanton Likens, Misses Mae Smith, Mattie and Glenn Harris, Eunice and Aileen Hollifield. The Bostic B. Y. P. U., went to Mount Lebanon last Sundhy evening and rendered a program for the bene fit of the B. Y. P. U. of that church which has recently been organized. A large crowd was present for the program. Bostic school commencement exer cises will be held next Friday and Saturday, May 15th and lGth. Fri day morning at 11:00 o'clock the ser mon will be delivered by Rev. W. L. Barrs, of Lexington. At 2:00 p. m., the Junior Order will present a flag to the school. At 4:00 p. m., there will be a ball game with Cliffside school. The program Friday evening will consist of choruses, pantomine and seventh grade playlet. Diplo mas will be awarded to seventh grade pupils by Supt. W. R. Hill. Saturday evening beginning at 8:00 o'clock the high school pupils will give "Son John" as their com mencement play. Boii£K4jld Bostic, R-l, of this sectio showers this | Memorial M Mt. Lebanc® Saturday,M : j row There dinner invited bask et flraSH Mr *sS3 this M rs. MflH cVItC cer S un i:WM son -HH :,unW ti .Kj •S orcßtijj ~mm otte^Bi re cfl iiutiK Coafl the erty H fourtM Town! Shoals Fortu* Duncn HempM Chimnl Gilkeyl properl Failij taxatioi verely at once TEN YEARS IN THE "HOME TOWN" NEWSPAPERS United States Rubber Company Cele brates Tenth Anniversary Of a Pioneering Advertising Program. In 1915 there were 2,445,666 auto mobiles in this country. It seemed a tremendous number. Some people were already talking about "the saturation point" being not far ahead. But if there were some men who couldn't see the woods for the trees, there were others whose faith never faltered. It took a lot of vision for them to see that the true market for the auto mobile had hardly been touched. It took a lot of courage for them What arc the Protestant Churches Coming to? ARE YOU A PROTESTANT CHURCH MEMBER? Are you aware of the fact that American Protestantism is fast slipping from the rocky heights of true Bible faith? Do you know that scores of theological semi naries, where your future ministers are being trained, have ruled out an infallible Bible; that thousands of ministers are preaching a man-made gospel; and that iiterally hundreds of thousands of church members are being swept along by this ever-rising tide of "modernism"? Do you know that this country today is thickly dotted with churches that are mere shells of their former selves? Do you know that a general collapse of American Protestantism was actually threatening some time ago; that a mighty counter-movement has started ; and that we are IN THE GREAT CRISIS right now? We want to reach EVERYBODY that calls himself a church member—also those who do not read a church paper, and they are legion. Hence this genera! announcement in your secular paper. Men and women, are you in favor of retaining the Bible that your fathers believed in and that your mothers trusted in, that was their hope and stay in times of grief and sorrow, that gave them cheering visions of a heavenly rest the rest that your liberals do not believe in because it belongs to the "supernatural" and, therefore, "unknowable"? Will you join us in saying "Whatever you do, or don't do, but HANDS OFF THE BIBLE?" Will you help save the Bible for America? Will you join in the fight for its integrity? Will you, too, deny modern scholarship the right to rob ur> of the only sure foundation upon which cur feet can stand, in these shifting sands of time? Then you are interested in the news that we are now able to convey to you—the greatest piece of news her alded icr a long turns, it is this, THAT A NEW REf OitMAIION IS CO?»l!NG! There are rumblings every where of the approaching battle—the battle between faith and unbelief, between true religion and false science, between FUNDAMENTALISM and LIBERALISM. And there is yet more news. It is this—that A GRiiAi GINI.RAI MAGAZINE is now being puoiished, for all the Protestant denominations, edited by the great leaders or conservative Protestantism, which is here to keep its readers promptly informed of every new development in the "new Reformation" movement, and v/hich is blazing the way to a "new Protest antism in America; The magazine is bigger than any denomination; it has nothing to do with this sect or tual. It it; interdenominational. It is here to tight, on a huge, nation-wine scale, for the sanctity of the Bible! where our fathers placed it—far above all the thoughts and philosophies, and im "ere to adore a PSVINE CHRIST in that DIVINELY INSPIRED BIBLE! would want for their Saviour in the hour of death; that i 3 the only j.' n *° s * r *ke their feet, weary of travel. is TIMES, READ THE FOREST CITY COURIER to bank on the ultimate success of the automobile in that market. They had both. Back in 1915, the United States j Rubber Company said "The real fu ture of the automobile is not in the big cities but away from them." It is not in short runs on city streets, but in mile after mile on country roads." So back in 1915 the United States Rubber Company began to prepare for this movement—and to help it. In 1915—ten years ago—the first U. S. Tire advertising began to ap pear in the "home town" papers. Few people saw these papers in their true dimension. Few realized the influence they had ',on what the people thought and did and wore and bought. Because few people realized the place they filled develop their little "side line of tires" into real business—always with the support of "U. S." Advertising in the local papers. Co-incident with the tenth anni versary of "home town" advertising by the United States Rubber Com pany, this company announces an other long step forward in the per fection of automobile tires—the greatest since the introduction of the cord itself—in its perfected Latex treated—Web Cord Royal Balloon Tire with the flat low pressure tread. Today there are 16,000,000 auto mobiles in this country. 80 per cent of them are owned by men and women on the farms and in the smaller communities. Where there was one U. S. tire dealer in the small towns then there are hundreds today—real merchants. What was only a vision in 1915 has come true in 1925. in the minds and lives of their read ers. The United States Rubber Com pany saw. As clearly as it saw that the de velopment of the automobile would in the smaller communities, it saw that the people in these commu nities would have to have tires to measure up to the service and tire merchants to sell them. And it saw that in the "home town" newspapers it had, ready to hand, the medium to help it put tire merchandising where it would have to be in the new era of the automobile. So ten years ago people began to read the first U. S. Tire Advertising in their "home town" paper—over the name of their "home town" dealer. They have been reading it ever since. They have seen these home dealers
Forest City Courier (Forest City, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1925, edition 1
9
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75